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At odds: laughing and thinking? The appreciation, processing, and persuasiveness of political satire

Authors :
Boukes, M.
Boomgaarden, H.G.
Moorman, M.
de Vreese, C.H.
Political Communication & Journalism (ASCoR, FMG)
Source :
Journal of Communication, 65(5), 721-744. Wiley-Blackwell
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

This study constructs and tests a conceptual model of how and for whom political satire affects political attitudes. With an experiment, we show that young adults compared to older people are more absorbed in satirical items than in regular news. Subsequently, absorption decreased counterarguing such that the attitude toward the satirized object was affected negatively. By contrast, we show that political satire positively affects the attitude toward the satirized subject via perceived funniness; this was particularly strong among those who held views congruent with the satire or lacked background knowledge, which follows disposition theory. Investigating the underlying and conditional processes gave insight into mechanisms through which satire influences attitudes and pinpointed possible reasons for mixed effects of this infotainment genre.

Details

Language :
Dutch; Flemish
ISSN :
00219916
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Communication, 65(5), 721-744. Wiley-Blackwell
Accession number :
edsair.narcis........80553d0da59fe836162f289a1214e640